[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 159 (Tuesday, December 11, 2012)]
[Senate]
[Pages S7718-S7720]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
SENATE RULES CHANGES
Mr. JOHANNS. Mr. President, the Founders of this great country
clearly wanted the Senate to serve as a deliberative body anchored with
the ability to fully amend and to fully debate issues. Yet there has
been a lot of talk lately about Senate rules changes to limit Senators'
ability to make their voices heard.
To many, this may sound like inside baseball, limited to the concerns
of just a handful of Senators. But let me assure you this issue is so
much more than that. The changes that are being contemplated would
significantly impact everyday Americans, especially those who live in
rural or less-populated States.
Take Nebraska, for example. We do not necessarily consider ourselves
small. We have almost 2 million people and several Fortune 500
companies. But we also do not like the idea of getting steamrolled by
high-population States; for example, California, New York or Illinois.
But that is exactly what these Senate rules changes would allow.
This is not just some wild supposition on my part. The majority
leader himself said the filibuster ``is a unique privilege that serves
to aid small States from being trampled by the desires of larger
states.'' He went on to say it is ``one of the most sacred rules of the
Senate.''
Of course, that was a few years ago, before he proposed to do the
very thing he has criticized. He now appears ready to undermine the
most important rule, not by a two-thirds vote, as clearly required by
Senate rule XXII, but by a simple majority fiat. This contradicts
longstanding practice and disregards the 67-vote threshold President
Lyndon Baines Johnson said ``preserves, indisputably, the character of
the Senate.''
This is the same so-called nuclear option Democrats previously
decried as breaking the rules to change the rules. For example, the
senior Senator from New York previously opposed such a blatant power
grab saying:
The checks and balances that Americans prize are at stake.
The idea of bipartisanship, where you have to come together
and can't just ram everything through because you have a
simple majority, is at stake. The very things we treasure and
love about this grand republic are at stake.
Those are pretty powerful and unequivocal words, but it does not stop
there.
The senior Senator from Illinois called it `` . . . attacking the
very force within the Senate that creates compromise and
bipartisanship.'' So that reflects a trifecta of the Democratic
leadership saying it is a bad idea. Yet they keep pushing it like it
has somehow magically been transformed into a good idea.
But it does not matter how long we polish the tin cup; it will not
magically become the golden chalice. Again, you do not have to believe
me. One of the Senate's great historians, Democratic Senator Byrd of
West Virginia, was very clear on this issue. He said: ``Our Founding
Fathers intended the Senate to be a continuing body that allows for
open and unlimited debate and the protection of minority rights.''
When faced with the idea of limiting these basic underpinnings of the
Senate, he concluded: ``We must never, ever, tear down the only wall--
the necessary fence--this nation has against the excesses of the
Executive Branch and the resultant haste and tyranny of the majority.''
I had the great privilege of working with Senator Byrd when I first
came to the Senate. We offered an amendment together which would have
prevented the majority from stretching the Senate rules to enact
Draconian cap-and-trade legislation on a simple majority vote--
interestingly enough, a situation not so different from today's
proposals.
Senator Byrd was very wise in these matters, serving as his party's
leader in both times of majority and minority. He had seen both sides
of the fence, if you will. He had studied the Framers and had
determined that such a blatant power grab could not stand. In fact, the
vast majority of our colleagues, on a bipartisan basis, agreed and our
amendment passed on a vote of 67 to 31. That is exactly what should
happen. If changes are needed, a bipartisan supermajority should
approve them, not a simple majority changing the rules to break the
rules, not a simple majority steamrolling the Nation.
[[Page S7719]]
Senator Byrd left no doubt about his opinion of the so-called nuclear
option when he implored us: `` . . . jealously guard against efforts to
change or reinterpret the Senate rules by a simple majority,
circumventing Rule 22 where a two-thirds majority is required.''
He concluded with a statement more eloquent than any original words I
might speak. So allow me to once again quote him. I implore my
colleagues to listen carefully:
. . . the Senate has been the last fortress of minority
rights and freedom of speech in the Republic for more than
two centuries. I pray that Senators will pause and reflect
before ignoring that history and tradition in favor of the
political priority of the moment.
It is often said those who fail to study history are doomed to repeat
it. I hope my colleagues will study this history, discover the wisdom
of Senator Byrd, and decide to abandon this ill-advised hostile
takeover of the Senate, this attempt to put a gag on the minority.
One of my favorite statements on this subject from Senator Byrd is:
``. . . before we get all steamed up, demanding radical changes of the
Senate rules, let's read the rules.''
Let's do that. Senate rule V clearly states that ``the rules of the
Senate shall continue from one Congress to the next Congress unless
they are changed as provided in these rules.''
Rule XXII is very clear. It unquestionably says the necessary
affirmative vote shall be two-thirds of the Senators present and voting
to change the Senate rules.
Again, very clearly, this is all about breaking the rules to change
the rules.
The sad thing for our Senate and our great Nation is that once the
bell is rung, it cannot be unrung. Simple majority votes to change our
Senate rules, I guarantee you, will become commonplace. Whenever a new
party takes control, they will change the rules by a majority vote.
Whoever occupies the majority at the moment will then run roughshod
over the minority party, the laws they passed when they were in the
majority, and their constituents. It is absolutely inevitable.
Today's assurances that it only applies to motions to proceed will
eventually ring hollow when it extends to judges, to bills, and then to
conference reports. There will be nothing to stop it.
One day we will awaken with a Senate that basically is the House of
Representatives, where majorities rule and only their leadership
decides what amendments will be considered and what votes will occur
and when they will occur. We will have a legislative branch that does
not resemble even faintly what the Framers of our great Constitution
envisioned.
But maybe, just as important, we would find entire states of
constituents who have no voice in the policies that affect their daily
lives. That would be a travesty.
I implore my colleagues one last time to listen to the wisdom of
their leaders of today and throughout our history--people such as our
majority leader, who said: ``For more than 200 years the rules of the
Senate have protected the American people, and rightfully so,'' and
Senator Byrd, who said: ``As long as the Senate retains the power to
amend and the power of unlimited debate, the liberties of the people
will remain secure.''
But, unfortunately, this great institution has evolved into a
constant cycle of bringing flawed legislation to the floor, filling the
amendment tree to prohibit all amendments, daring the minority party to
vote no to protect the rights of their constituents, and when they do
so, claim they are filibustering and obstructionist.
If we could fix this one basic problem, if we could return the Senate
to its most basic principle of open debate and opportunity for
amendments, maybe we would realize the folly of these proposed rules
changes and we would get back in the business of being Senators again
and working together again.
This quick fix is not the answer. I hope between now and January
cooler heads will prevail, and we will put ourselves back on a path to
finding bipartisan solutions to our Nation's most pressing problems.
I yield the floor.
Mr. UDALL of New Mexico. Mr. President, I ask through the Chair if
the Senator from Nebraska will yield for a question.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from New Mexico asks the Senator
from Nebraska to yield.
Mr. JOHANNS. Yes, I will.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from New Mexico.
Mr. UDALL of New Mexico. The Senator from Nebraska has talked about
the rules not being able to be changed because internally in the Senate
rules there is a provision that says you need a supermajority, two-
thirds of the Senate, to change the rules. This is the proposition we
are hearing argued by many Senators, that we are breaking the rules to
change the rules. We have heard that repeated several times over and
over on the Senate floor.
The other side of the argument, as the Senator I think well knows, as
he worked up here and was around and saw Senator Byrd, is that the
Constitution is superior to the Senate rules. And the Constitution
specifically says, in article 1, section 5, that each House may
determine the rules of its proceedings. Statutory construction applied
to that means a simple majority determines the rules of its
proceedings. This is a standard interpretation construction.
We know supermajorities are only indicated at several places in the
Constitution, and every place else it is implied that it is by a
majority. Here you have a supermajority in the Senate rules and you
have the Constitution saying at the beginning of a Congress you can
change the rules by majority vote. So the question to the Senator is:
Does not he agree the Constitution is superior to the Senate rules?
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Nebraska.
Mr. JOHANNS. Mr. President, the Constitution would always trump, but
that is a misinterpretation of what we are doing here. Let me play this
out, because I am pretty confident I know how this is going to work if
this is pursued. What would happen in January is there would be a
request for a ruling by the Parliamentarian, and the Parliamentarian
would correctly rule that in order to change the rules you need two-
thirds of the Senate. Then they would use the procedure of overruling
our Parliamentarian with a majority vote. That will then stand as the
ruling for the Senate. Very clearly what you are doing is you are
skirting both the Constitution and the rules of the Senate.
Let me, if I might, take the Senator's question and show the shocking
result we are going to end up with. Do you realize there was a day in
this body where judges were not filibustered? We can look at Supreme
Court judges who might be controversial to one side or the other who
were approved by a majority vote.
So what happened? My friends on the other side of the aisle sat down,
they brought in some constitutional scholar. He said: Well, why are you
not filibustering judges? And now it is very routine and very common--
and both sides do it. So here is what is going to happen. Every time
you have a majority that comes to power--and we all know the pendulum
swings. In our lifetime we will see Republicans returned to the
majority. That is how elections go--once this is cracked open, then
they as the majority party can come in to change the rules and
basically say: It is open season. We will get a ruling from the
Parliamentarian just as the Democrats did. We will overrule that ruling
of the Parliamentarian by a 51-vote majority or 50, if you have the
Vice President in the chair, and then Katy-bar-the-door. All laws
passed by that majority are now subject to being repealed by a majority
vote.
If you can do it on the motion to proceed, there is not any reason
you cannot use this very flawed procedure to do it on every other piece
and step along the way. That is what Senator Byrd was warning us about.
He was basically saying: Members of the Senate, once you crack this
door open, there is no turning back. And there will not be any turning
back.
So what happens to our country? Well, No. 1, the minority becomes
powerless in the Senate. As a Member of the minority, I could come down
here, I could offer an amendment. I could join forces with Senator Byrd
on using reconciliation on climate change, and we could get 67 votes.
But all of a sudden what is going to happen here is your minority is
going to be basically
[[Page S7720]]
without a voice in the Senate because the majority rules. That was
never intended. That has not been part of our history.
So I think to directly answer the question, you are misinterpreting
what this is all about. The net effect of where we are going to end up,
if we go in this direction, I guarantee you, in our lifetime we will
look back at that moment in history and we will say that changed the
operation of the Senate forever.
As I said in my comments, once the bell is rung, it is impossible to
unring the bell. We will not have stability in our laws and we will not
have stability in our Senate and we will have a minority that is
absolutely powerless. I do not believe that is what was intended.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Alabama.
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